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  2. Weissman score - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weissman_score

    The Weissman score is a performance metric for lossless compression applications. It was developed by Tsachy Weissman, a professor at Stanford University, and Vinith Misra, a graduate student, at the request of producers for HBO's television series Silicon Valley, a television show about a fictional tech start-up working on a data compression algorithm.

  3. WebP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebP

    WebP's lossless compression, a newer algorithm unrelated to VP8, was designed by Google software engineer Jyrki Alakuijala. It uses advanced techniques such as dedicated entropy codes for different color channels, exploiting 2D locality of backward reference distances and a color cache of recently used colors.

  4. Graphics Core Next - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphics_Core_Next

    As of July 2017, the Graphics Core Next instruction set has seen five iterations. The differences between the first four generations are rather minimal, but the fifth-generation GCN architecture features heavily modified stream processors to improve performance and support the simultaneous processing of two lower-precision numbers in place of a single higher-precision number.

  5. Image scaling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image_scaling

    When scaling a vector graphic image, the graphic primitives that make up the image can be scaled using geometric transformations with no loss of image quality. When scaling a raster graphics image, a new image with a higher or lower number of pixels must be generated. In the case of decreasing the pixel number (scaling down), this usually ...

  6. Apache Hadoop - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Hadoop

    This is designed to scale to tens of petabytes of storage and runs on top of the file systems of the underlying operating systems. Apache Hadoop Ozone: HDFS-compatible object store targeting optimized for billions of small files. FTP file system: This stores all its data on remotely accessible FTP servers.

  7. GIMP - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GIMP

    The GNU Image Manipulation Program, commonly known by its acronym GIMP (/ ɡ ɪ m p / ⓘ GHIMP), is a free and open-source raster graphics editor [3] used for image manipulation (retouching) and image editing, free-form drawing, transcoding between different image file formats, and more specialized tasks.

  8. Twitter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twitter

    Twitter, officially known as X since 2023, is a social networking service.It is one of the world's largest social media platforms and one of the most-visited websites. [4] [5] Users can share short text messages, images, and videos in short posts commonly known as "tweets" (officially "posts") and like other users' content. [6]

  9. Swift (programming language) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swift_(programming_language)

    Official downloads of the SDK and toolchain for the Ubuntu distribution of Linux have been available since Swift 2.2, with more distros added since Swift 5.2.4, CentOS and Amazon Linux. [49] There is an unofficial SDK and native toolchain package for Android too. [50] [51]